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To What Extent Is

“El Médico De Su Honra” Principally A Play About Honour? Essay, Research Paper


??????????? Honour was one of the prominent issues in the


Spanish Golden Age dramas of which Calderón and Lope de


Vega were the main exponents. Indeed, the play is called a


“drama de honor”.? The very fact that Calderón


chose to include the word ‘honra’ in the title of the


play ‘El Médico de su Honra’ indicates that


indeed a certain element of honour must be present within. One


must find out whether honour is the principal cause of the play


or if other themes hold more importance.??? ??????????? In the “Diccionario de Autoridades”


– the first dictionary of the Spanish language,


“honor” is described as: ? “Se toma muchas veces por reputación y lustre


de alguna familia, acción u otra cosa…Se toma


assimismo por obsequio, apláuso o celebridad de alguna


cosa. Significa tambien la honestidad y recato en las


mugéres.” ? “Honra”, while interchangeable with


“honor” in many regards, has been said to impart


honour with a more interior connotation, as in “respect for


personal worth”: ? “Reverencia, acatamiento y veneración que se hace


á la virtúd, autoridad ò mayoría de


alguna persona…Significa tambien pundonór,


estimacion y buena fama, que se halla en el sujeto y debe


conservar…Se toma tambien por la integridad


virginál en las mugéres .” ? Despite using “honra” in the title,


Calderón uses “honor” far more frequently in


the play. In the first act, “honor” appears almost


exclusively and mostly refers to the honours of the women


Mencía and Leonor. In Act Two, Gutierre addresses his


honour as if it were a person: ? ?“¡Ay honor! Mucho tenemos que // hablar a solas


los dos” (1401) ? In terms of the whole play however, “honra” is


invoked with relative infrequency and usually as a synonym for


“honor”. It is safe to say that Calderón used


the former for variety and for purposes of rhyme and rhythm since


“honra” is stressed on the first syllable and


“honor” on the second. ?????? ??????????? Honour is often embodied, in ‘El


Médico de su Honra’ as social reputation by those


involved in it. The vast majority of the characters are of noble


birth; the King Don Pedro I, the ‘Infante’ Don


Enrique, Don Gutierre, Doña Mencía and Doña


Leonor. Perhaps it is Doña Leonor who, early on, sets the


climate which indicates the importance that honour will acquire.


She shows that she is a slave to public opinion and her


reputation. Thus arises her obsession to regain her honour which


was put in jeopardy when her lover, D. Gutierre, failed to marry


her “Diome palabra de que sería mi


esposo” and thus dishonoured her because of his


suspicions concerning her fidelity. Don Pedro, who is renowned


for being just in matters concerning honour, knows that


Doña Leonor’s grievance must surely be true, for she


dares to tell him of her dishonour in public: “Hablad


agora, porque si venisteis // de parte del honor, como


dijisteis,//? indigna cosa fuera //? que en público el


honor sus quejas diera”. ? Yet, despite her private desire for his


‘deshonra’, in public she keeps up appearances and


defends his name when confronted about him by Don Arias by


stating that he is “Un caballero que en todas las


ocasiones con obrar y con decir, sabrá muy bien cumplir en


sus obligaciones”. Importantly, it is seen via her


actions and also through those of other characters, namely Don


Gutierre and Doña Mencía that a passion for honour


is more important than love itself. ? Doña Mencía is an interesting character.


Throughout the play she struggles against her desire to restart


her love affair with Don Enrique who clearly is very willing for


this to happen. However, due to the fact that she is married,


although this may have been against her will, she remains


faithful: “Tuve amor y tengo honor”.


Ultimately perhaps she pays the price for her various acts of


imprudence, as envisioned via various small yet vital things that


she does, such as writing a letter to Don Enrique, only for Don


Gutierre to find it as the play reaches its climax. The letter


appears to condemn her actions and thus fuel Don Gutierre’s


rage even more, whereas in fact, had she been given the chance to


finish the letter, her actions would have been explained and


Gutierre would have seen that she was indeed still faithful to


him. ? Don Gutierre’s actions are dictated by the need to


uphold social reputation in the form of self-dignity; ultimately


honour. He is the character which relies most on the supposed


“injustice of dishonour” to justify his actions. He


could be described as “la encarnación la más


completa del sentimiento del honor en lo que tiene de irracional


y falso”. Thus, his actions are controlled by


honour/dishonour, and considering that ultimately his actions


shape the play, namely in dishonouring Doña Leonor paving


the way for her need to obtain justice and his suspicion in his


wife Doña Mencía being so great that he actually


cold-heartedly murders her, honour can be seen as the sole force


shaping the outcome of the play. By the end of the segunda


jornada, Don Gutierre’s state of mind is such that he makes


comments such as “Ay honor! Mucho tenemos // que hablar


a solas los dos” and more vividly “A peligro


estáis, honor, //? no hay hora en vos que no sea //


crítica; en vuestro sepulcro // vivís… Os he


de curar, honor,//? y pues al principio muestra // este primero


accidente //? tan grave peligro”. He does not see that


Mencía is honouring him precisely because of her belief


that “[Así] es como ha de ser, porque me he de


resolver a una temeraria acción”. This again


highlights the importance of honour above love and desire because


social reputation and the form of honour, is more important. ? Don Pedro I endorses honour to a great extent, yet only where


it is based on justice, as viewed in the scene between Don


Gutierre and Doña Leonor. Also, the insincere honour which


is shown by Don Enrique towards Doña Mencia is certainly


worth mentioning; for he is an example of how often selfish


motives can damage the good honour of others, namely


Mencía. Gutierre is also a culprit of this tendency. ? However, honour is not only embodied as social awareness

in


nobility. Coquín, who is the only main character who does


not come from a noble background and who serves as a jester to


King Don Pedro I, sheds light on situations and views honour, and


subsequently, acts and reacts in a very different way from the


others. His honour is more a moral one than a social one, as


described in the previous characters. He cares little about the


‘qué dirán’ aspect that Doña


Leonor in particular shows herself to be loyal to. He states,


after Don Gutierre was released from prison for the night on good


faith, that he simply shouldn’t return. This is simple, yet


effective. “El honor de esa ley no se entiende en el


criado”, yet in fact, his honour is being saved for an


action which deserves it, namely trying to save Doña


Mencía’s life at the end: “ésta es


una honrada acción de hombre bien nacido, en


fin”. He will not risk his life just to “bien


parecer”. When compared to other characters, who go to


such lengths precisely for what Coquín would see as the


‘wrong reasons’, a sense of ridicule ensues. ? Although honour is, undeniably, a vital force behind the


development of plot, being the emotion from which other more


minor themes emerge, perhaps it is not honour in itself that


Calderón is examining, rather the degree of prudence with


which characters such as Doña Mencía and Don


Enrique reacted to it. The imprudence of many of the


characters’ actions feature largely in the play. That Arias


should enter Leonor’s house at night is an


“atrevimiento” against the social standards of honour


since she had not allowed him to enter. Nonetheless it is Leonor


who admits that she must take the blame: ? “Yo tuve la culpa, yo // la pena siento; y así //


solo me quejo de mí,// y de mi estrella.” ? Leonor places the question mark against her honour and must


spend the rest of the play trying to have it removed. ??????????? Leonor’s second imprudence is when she goes to the king


to ostensibly request the “dowry” that will enable


her to enter and live in a convent . although an unhappy


decision, in the circumstances it is the prudent one, and it is


right to appeal to the royal bounty. Leonor states to her maid


that justice, in effect, would be vengeance if the king heard her


plea. This plea is a disclosure of her grievances – a


breach of promise and a denial of legal redress. Her imprudence


lies in not accepting the verdict of the courts and in appealing


to the highest judicial authority for an impossible reparation


(since Gutierrez has married). At the end of the Act, Leonor even


states that she seeks vengeance: “…venganza me


dé el cielo!” ??????????? The king’s imprudence lies in him ignoring the practical


solution of sending her to a convent and in offering her the


false hope of a redress that is in fact impossible. In saying


that the poor cannot expect justice in Pedro’s kingdom,


Leonor has injured the king’s pride of being the “rey


justiciero” which is why he personally takes up her


cause. ??????????? Gutierre’s imprudence was to jump to the conclusion that


Leonor had dishonoured him: “quien hizo al amor ofensa,


// se le hace al honor en él…” But there is more than imprudence here, there is a rigid pride


that does not shrink from injuring the woman he loves. The


initial rashness of Arias and Leonor is turned into an


unpardonable offence. This act of injustice sets the play in


motion for a series of fateful events. Gutierre had thought he


could shrug off this act of injustice but it rebounds to strike


at his marriage, to affront his pride a second time and to make


him repeat an injury to the woman he loves- this time by


murdering her. At the end of the play, Gutierre must fulfil his


promise of marriage that he should never have broken, but


fulfilling it at the cost of a terrible injustice of a far


greater kind. ??????????? ??????????? ?? The different sub-themes which arise from


honour in the general sense are all very important in


contributing to the outcome of the play. All of them, jealousy,


disillusionment, loyalty, justice, guilt, revenge and ultimately


tragedy resulting in death, are interlinked in arising from


honour. As already seen, Doña Leonor, on behalf of her


honour, calls for justice; as Don Gutierre proposes death he


states “Mi honor perdí, mi muerte


hallé” for lack of honour is even worse than


death, and this also links in with the theme of revenge which is


what ultimately pushes Don Gutierre to kill Doña


Mencía, not as a result of a passionate row, but as a


result of careful planning. ? However, having stated that there are indeed other themes in


‘El Médico de su Honra’ , do any of these


surpass their creator (honour) and become fully-fledged themes in


themselves? The importance of jealousy is great, for


Coquín, in his final act of honour in trying to protect


the ‘innocent’ Doña Mencía states


“Gutierre mal informado por aparentes recelos,


llegó a tener viles celos de su honor” and thus


he is suspected of wanting to kill Mencía. Although


therefore jealousy as felt by Gutierre is the immediate cause,


fundamentally it is his need to protect his honour that drives


him to this point. The same occurs with other aspects of


behaviour or provocations of behaviour: revenge, in


Leonor’s case because she feels that she has been wronged


to the extent of her good reputation being scarred for life. If


one is dishonoured publicly, the way in which the culprit should


repay should be public too; hence Don Gutierre and Doña


Leonor’s marriage at the end of the play. By this stage,


justice has been performed by Don Pedro, decreeing that they must


marry, and whereas Leonor had previously stated “Pues es


mejor que sin vida, sin opinión, sin honor viva, que no


sin amor, de un marido aborrecida”, she now remains


satisfied at the outcome, perhaps not so much due to the fact


that they have married, but because he has been publicly


humiliated as she was. ?????? ?? ??????????? In short, “El médico de su


honra” is a play fundamentally about honour. It cannot be


denied that other themes enter the play as it develops and that


ultimately the climax of the play (Mencía’s death)


is an act of betrayal and jealousy. But although there may be


immediate reasons for certain actions in the play, the


underlying, driving cause is honour itself.??

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